Alexander Wang, the designer who embodies
the downtown New York cool so beloved of off-duty models, and Philipp Plein
offered contrasting perspectives on the point of Style Week Saturday. Is
it
about the clothes or the mother of all stunts?

For Wang, the US wunderkind and ex-creative director of Balenciaga, the
clothes spoke for themselves, giving fall/winter 2018 an ode to power
dressing
and the working woman in his trademark black.
His models, including Kaia Gerber, powered out under strip lighting on an
office-cubicle set -- the kind of dull grey space that no one who can afford
his clothes would ever get paid enough to work in.

For his final shebang before going off piste and showing in June and
December, outside the traditional Style Week calendar, Wang's woman is
very
much post-#MeToo and the sexual harassment watershed.
She is no nonsense, zipped up and dressed for business, predominately
kitted out in leather, and a sprinkling of hot pink -- the same color of the
hats worn by women marching against the Trump administration.

Wang did a victory lap of the runway at the end, his long dark hair
flying,
grinning from ear to ear and blowing a kiss to the audience.

Space ship

"The business model needs to change because the consumer has changed,"
Stephanie Horton, chief strategy officer at the label has said of the
forthcoming timetable switch that some expect to catch on.
But for Plein, the so-called bad boy of fashion whose flamboyance, bling
and flashiness has had the style establishment up in arms, the point is the
experience, the buzz and the chaos.

The German-born, Swiss-based designer put on a futuristic display at the
Brooklyn Naval Yard, fake snow falling from the ceiling and coating his
guests, many of whom were soaked by heavy rain and infuriated by bouncers'
seemingly chaotic policy on opening the doors.

Known for his extravagant staging, the show kicked off an hour late with
hip hop trio Migos, Plein-branded snow mobiles roaring on the runway, a
smoke-spewing, deafeningly loud space ship coming down to land and a
Transformers-style robot walking hand in hand with a cat-suited model.
The backdrop was aluminum-foil style mountains, the room bathed in blue
light and the music anything from hip hop and body-jarring thumping bass to
Frank Sinatra's "Fly Me To The Moon."

His models wore skin-tight ski suits and giant knee-high fur boots,
kicking
up the fake snow with pink hair and silver teddy bear bags, while his men
wore
Philipp Plein-emblazoned leather jackets and Playboy hoodies.
At the end the models danced under the red strobe lighting of the
make-believe space ship, writhing in aluminum colored puffer pants, sequined
tracksuits and fur coats with transparent overlay.

"In fashion, we're all playing with the same weapons," the 39-year-old
designer told BBC News in an interview.

'Black cowboy'

"The difference is brand positioning and imaging," he added. "People in
the
luxury fashion industry buy brands, and when you buy a brand you buy a
dream,
an emotion, a name."
Other highlights saw designer Kerby Jean-Raymond, known for his political
approach to fashion, debut his Pyer Moss collaboration with Reebok by paying
homage to black cowboys and the history of minorities.

"What I wanted to do is start talking about subcultures of America,
different people who were left out," the 30-year-old told AFP.
"We started," he explained, with "the story of the American cowboy, which
was rewritten and whitewashed. But the original cowboy was a black man," he
added.

Christian Siriano, a -size diversity advocate and red carpet designer
who has dressed Hollywood and Michelle Obama, celebrated 10 years in the
business with Whoopi Goldberg and Meg Ryan front row.
It was a collection that showcased diversity in all shapes, sizes and
colors under a theme dubbed the "ultimate royal dinner party."

Men, women and trans models walked the red carpeted runway at the
hallowed
environs of New York's Masonic Hall for the London-trained designer's
collection inspired by late 18th century British art.
"It isn't such a serious thing. Getting dressed should be a fun thing in
the morning," he told Styleista.com. (AFP)